Maus Generational Trauma

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Art Spiegelman’s Maus offers readers a unique and powerful experience of a historical tragedy by exploring generational trauma through the victim’s perspective. The graphic novel follows the inhumanity experiences during World War 2 specific to Vladek, a survivor of the Holocaust. The concept of generational trauma stems from the victim’s personal experiences, written in the lines of the past and present, allowing Maus to have a powerful impact on the reader. The unique choice of interconnecting the past and present allows Maus to convey the profound and lasting impacts that the historical tragedy brought to its victims. Art Spiegelman followed through with his decision to join Vladek’s retelling of the historical tragedy with small snippets …show more content…

Primarily focusing on the victims and not the perpetrators, the graphic novel author utilizes mice as a metaphor for Jews. Contrasting to depicting humans as they are, the use of theriomorphism provides characters with anonymity, creating a distance between the characters and the readers. On page 185, Jews are rounded up to go to Auschwitz, which is understood through the present-day conversation between Vladek and Artie on the left. On the right are panels depicting the transition of Jews from when they maintained individuality to when they were stripped of their clothes, papers, and their hair. In the top left panel, the mice have some individuality - their clothes and accessories are different. After being told to get undressed and leave their valuables, Jews are left “cold and afraid”, as Vladek says in the present [The Complete Maus, p.185], as well as stripped of the things that made them unique - their identity. The illustrations of Jews at this point are left in the background of the last panel. Being the background, the mice are noticeably darkened, which meant that their faces were hardly visible, again, emphasizing the loss of individuality and later on humanity - signifying the start of the horrors in Auschwitz. The page presents the start of what was considered the most horrific times of Vladek and other victims’ lives, and the horrors of the time would worsen the existing trauma Vladek had acquired in the previous half of the narrative. The significance of the visual language in both the plot and the development of generational trauma brings readers back to the present where the weight of all the inescapable turmoil Vladek carries is an underlying obstacle in his life and

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